Population reinforcement and demographic changes needed to stabilise the population of a migratory vulture

被引:13
|
作者
Oppel, Steffen [1 ]
Saravia, Victoria [2 ]
Bounas, Anastasios [2 ]
Arkumarev, Volen [3 ]
Kret, Elzbieta [4 ]
Dobrev, Vladimir [3 ]
Dobrev, Dobromir [3 ]
Kordopatis, Panagiotis [2 ]
Skartsi, Theodora [4 ]
Velevski, Metodija [5 ]
Petrovski, Nenad [5 ]
Bino, Taulant [6 ]
Topi, Mirjan [7 ]
Klisurov, Ivaylo [8 ]
Stoychev, Stoycho [3 ]
Nikolov, Stoyan C. [3 ]
机构
[1] Royal Soc Protect Birds, RSPB Ctr Conservat Sci, Cambridge, England
[2] Hellen Ornithol Soc BirdLife Greece, Athens, Greece
[3] Bulgarian Soc Protect Birds BirdLife Bulgaria, Sofia, Bulgaria
[4] WWF Greece, Athens, Greece
[5] Macedonian Ecol Soc, Skopje, North Macedonia
[6] Albanian Ornithol Soc, Tirana, Albania
[7] Protect & Preservat Nat Environm Albania, Tirana, Albania
[8] Green Balkans, Stara Zagora, Bulgaria
关键词
Balkan peninsula; Bayesian population analysis; captive breeding; captive release; extinction; population viability analysis; reintroduction; translocation; EGYPTIAN VULTURE; NEOPHRON-PERCNOPTERUS; BREEDING PERFORMANCE; BEARDED VULTURES; LONG-DISTANCE; TETRAX-TETRAX; CONSERVATION; SURVIVAL; MORTALITY; RELEASE;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2664.13958
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
One approach to stabilise small and declining populations is to breed individuals in captivity and release them into the wild to reinforce existing populations while working to reduce threats. Population reinforcement programmes require long-term commitments to be successful and can divert limited resources from other conservation measures. A rigorous evaluation whether reinforcement can stabilise a population is therefore essential to justify investments. Many migratory species incur high mortality during their first migration, and releasing captive-bred birds at an older age may therefore benefit reinforcement programmes for migratory birds. We examine whether a small and declining population of a long-distance migratory raptor-the Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus-can be stabilised using population reinforcement that reduces mortality during the first migration. We used an integrated population model to evaluate realistic reinforcement and survival improvement scenarios to estimate how many captive-bred birds would need to be released to stabilise the population. Survival probability of wild juveniles during their first year (0.296; 95% CI 0.234-0.384) was too low for a stable population (population growth rate 0.949; 95% CI 0.940-0.956), but captive-bred juveniles released in their second calendar year had improved survival (0.566; 95% CI 0.265-0.862) during their first year in the wild. Reinforcement of 15 birds per year for 30 years was insufficient to achieve a neutral or positive population growth rate. However, reinforcement reduced the probability of extinction by 2049 from 48% without reinforcement to Synthesis and applications. Although releasing captive-bred birds can reduce high juvenile mortality during first migration and assist in postponing local extinction, further improvements of survival in the wild are required to safeguard a migratory population where threats in the wild will persist for decades despite management.
引用
收藏
页码:2711 / 2721
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Assessing genetic diversity patterns at neutral and adaptive loci to inform population reinforcement of an endangered migratory vulture
    Anastasios Bounas
    Victoria Saravia-Mullin
    Maria Méndez
    Volen Arkumarev
    Lusine Aghajanyan
    Korsh Ararat
    Evan Buechley
    Vladimir Dobrev
    Dobromir Dobrev
    Ron Efrat
    Ivaylo Klisurov
    Elzbieta Kret
    Theodora Skartsi
    Steffen Oppel
    Rusko Petrov
    Çağan H. Şekercioğlu
    Anton Vaidl
    José A. Donázar
    Stoyan C. Nikolov
    Konstantinos Sotiropoulos
    [J]. Journal of Ornithology, 2023, 164 : 677 - 688
  • [2] Assessing genetic diversity patterns at neutral and adaptive loci to inform population reinforcement of an endangered migratory vulture
    Bounas, Anastasios
    Saravia-Mullin, Victoria
    Mendez, Maria
    Arkumarev, Volen
    Aghajanyan, Lusine
    Ararat, Korsh
    Buechley, Evan
    Dobrev, Vladimir
    Dobrev, Dobromir
    Efrat, Ron
    Klisurov, Ivaylo
    Kret, Elzbieta
    Skartsi, Theodora
    Oppel, Steffen
    Petrov, Rusko
    Sekercioglu, Cagan H.
    Vaidl, Anton
    Donazar, Jose A.
    Nikolov, Stoyan C.
    Sotiropoulos, Konstantinos
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY, 2023, 164 (03) : 677 - 688
  • [3] An assessment of population size and demographic drivers of the Bearded Vulture using integrated population models
    Margalida, Antoni
    Jimenez, Jose
    Martinez, Jose M.
    Sese, Jose A.
    Garcia-Ferre, Diego
    Llamas, Alfonso
    Razin, Martine
    Angels Colomer, Ma
    Arroyo, Beatriz
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2020, 90 (03)
  • [4] Carrion ecology modelling for vulture conservation: are vulture restaurants needed to sustain the densest breeding population of the African white-backed vulture?
    Kane, A.
    Jackson, A. L.
    Monadjem, A.
    Colomer, M. A.
    Margalida, A.
    [J]. ANIMAL CONSERVATION, 2015, 18 (03) : 279 - 286
  • [5] The demographic drivers of local population dynamics in two rare migratory birds
    Schaub, Michael
    Reichlin, Thomas S.
    Abadi, Fitsum
    Kery, Marc
    Jenni, Lukas
    Arlettaz, Raphael
    [J]. OECOLOGIA, 2012, 168 (01) : 97 - 108
  • [6] The demographic drivers of local population dynamics in two rare migratory birds
    Michael Schaub
    Thomas S. Reichlin
    Fitsum Abadi
    Marc Kéry
    Lukas Jenni
    Raphaël Arlettaz
    [J]. Oecologia, 2012, 168 : 97 - 108
  • [7] Residential changes and migratory movements in the population renewal of Barcelona
    Jose Medina, Antonio
    [J]. DOCUMENTS D ANALISI GEOGRAFICA, 2010, 56 (03): : 641 - 643
  • [8] The population of France: demographic changes since 1946
    Roussel, Sylvie
    [J]. ESPACES-POPULATIONS-SOCIETES, 2007, (01): : 128 - 129
  • [9] Demographic changes and consequences in an aging physician population
    Goldstein, MZ
    Loebel, JP
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS, 2003, 15 : 197 - 198
  • [10] Identifying key demographic parameters for the viability of a growing population of the endangered Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus
    Tauler, Helena
    Real, Joan
    Hernandez-Matias, Antonio
    Aymerich, Pere
    Baucells, Jordi
    Martorell, Carles
    Santandreu, Joan
    [J]. BIRD CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 25 (04) : 426 - 439